Riley and His Story: Me and My Outrage, You and Us by Monica Haller & Riley Sharbonno
Item#:MOHA101 Published: Onestar Press / F�_lth&H�_ssler 2009 Edition: First Edition (/1000) Hardcover Language: English 480 pages, 6.5 x 9.25 inches Color ISBN#: 978-2-915359-38-1 Condition: Used - Very good #North American Books #First Edition #Color #Photobooks #Documentary Photography #Archive Photography This book presents the daily life of the Iraq war, as lived and photographed by Riley Sharbonno, an army nurse who served at Abu Ghraib prison from 2004-2005. Riley used his camera as an almost prosthetic device to record the events his memory suppressed; on other occasions he used the camera to "store" overwhelming experiences with the aim of processing them later.
Item#:MOHA101 Published: Onestar Press / F�_lth&H�_ssler 2009 Edition: First Edition (/1000) Hardcover Language: English 480 pages, 6.5 x 9.25 inches Color ISBN#: 978-2-915359-38-1 Condition: Used - Very good #North American Books #First Edition #Color #Photobooks #Documentary Photography #Archive Photography This book presents the daily life of the Iraq war, as lived and photographed by Riley Sharbonno, an army nurse who served at Abu Ghraib prison from 2004-2005. Riley used his camera as an almost prosthetic device to record the events his memory suppressed; on other occasions he used the camera to "store" overwhelming experiences with the aim of processing them later.
Item#:MOHA101 Published: Onestar Press / F�_lth&H�_ssler 2009 Edition: First Edition (/1000) Hardcover Language: English 480 pages, 6.5 x 9.25 inches Color ISBN#: 978-2-915359-38-1 Condition: Used - Very good #North American Books #First Edition #Color #Photobooks #Documentary Photography #Archive Photography This book presents the daily life of the Iraq war, as lived and photographed by Riley Sharbonno, an army nurse who served at Abu Ghraib prison from 2004-2005. Riley used his camera as an almost prosthetic device to record the events his memory suppressed; on other occasions he used the camera to "store" overwhelming experiences with the aim of processing them later.